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West Virginia’s annual book festival celebrating national and regional authors will come to the Charleston Coliseum and Convention Center this October.
Continue Reading Take Me to More NewsAs former Massey Energy CEO Don Blankenship stands trial in Charleston, federal prosecutors continue to present evidence that he conspired to violate federal mine safety standards leading up to the April 2010 explosion at the Upper Big Branch Mine.
Over the course of Massey’s ownership of the mine, the company amassed nearly 5,000 citations from the federal Mine Safety & Health Administration. Of those, many were designated as “significant and substantial” by MSHA standards.
According to MSHA, a violation designated as significant and substantial, often referred to as an “s and s violation” in the industry, indicates “that based upon the particular facts surrounding the violation there exists a reasonable likelihood the hazard contributed to will result in an injury or illness of a reasonably serious nature.”
In 2010 alone, MSHA officials slapped mine operator Performance Coal Company–a subsidiary of Massey–with 930 citations. The company oversaw the Upper Big Branch mine.
Blankenship’s defense filed a motion to prevent the MSHA citations from being admitted as evidence, calling the hundreds of citation issued during the indictment period (from January 1, 2008 to April 9, 2010) hearsay. On October 6, Judge Irene Berger ruled the citations could be used by the prosecution, noting:
“[T]he citations are not being offered for the truth of the matter asserted in them or, in other words, to prove violations of safety standards but are being offered as evidence of the defendant’s knowledge, intent, and/or willfulness as well as notice. That being the case, the documents are not hearsay and are admissible in my opinion given the allegations in the counts of the indictment. I further anticipate, if the documents are offered, giving the jury a limiting instruction that they cannot consider those citations for the truth of what’s contained in them but they can be considered for the fact that they were issued and, thus, can be used by them in their consideration of notice and the defendant’s knowledge, intent, and/or willfulness."
MSHA safety citations have long been a problem at the Upper Big Branch mine–long before the indictment period.
Here’s a look at the citations issued to the company by year of date issued during the time that Performance Coal Company operated the mine:
Most Frequent Citations at Upper Big Branch Under Massey
Performance Coal Company was issued citations stemming from violations of a wide range of MSHA standards–everything from failing to create a roof control plan, issues with rock dusting and the accumulation of combustible materials.
The interactive graphic below breaks down each of the company’s citations by MSHA standard, with the largest circles representing standards with the highest frequency of citations.
A full listing of MSHA standards can be accessed through the agency’s website.
Editor’s Note: West Virginia State University graduate student and West Virginia Public Broadcasting Media Diversity Fellow Ikram Benaicha contributed to this report.